Preaching To Move A Church: An Interview With H. Beecher Hicks
On
Jordan’s Stormy Banks walks you through what my encounter has been
with our current situation, our current context, our current community and holds
that experience in tension and juxtaposition with the truths of scripture —
with how the Word of God speaks to these issues and how we were able to seize
the Bible as a living tool for the transmission of vision from one generation
to the next.
Preaching:
How has your preaching changed over your 28 years as pastor of Metropolitan?
Hicks:
I think that my preaching has become more direct, more purposeful. I think that
my preaching tends to address problems or speak to issues or concerns within
the community as I’ve come to understand them. I think my preaching has
become far more instructive for the purpose of shaping the mind of the congregation.
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Bear
in mind that preaching in the District of Columbia is far different from most
other cities. Washington is the Capitol of the World. Our worship is always
joined by persons of different cultures from across the globe. Washington is
the center of our government. On any given Sunday our pews will be visited by
persons who work in City Hall, in congress and the White House. It truly is
a “bully pulpit.” That is why preaching in this context bears such
urgency. I am required, in the words of the Apostle Paul, to give the sound
of a “certain trumpet.” In this pulpit, a flute will not suffice.
One
of the things that has happened most recently is that in our effort to communicate
this vision to the congregation, we began to deal with the concept of the Kingdom.
The Kingdom as we find it in scripture is pivotal to an understanding of what
Jesus was about and what I believe the church was intended to be. So our dialogue
has not been about building the Kingdom — because whatever we build is
subject to decay and corruption. We talk, rather, about becoming the Kingdom.
We
are trying to get the congregation to accept the concept that we are not here
to build something, we’re not here to buy something or pay for something;
we are here to become something that is central to our growth and development,
something that is larger than ourselves. It is something that moves us toward
what God intended for us to be and what God intended for us to do. The building
becomes secondary, an aid toward the fulfillment of ministry and not an end
in itself.
So
that’s what we’ve been teaching and preaching, and singing. The whole
congregation has been caught up — even in our Sunday school classes —
with the notion of what it means to become the Kingdom. We are not only moving
physically, we are moving spiritually in order that we can become something
greater than we are.
The
concepts related to becoming the Kingdom have also shaped my preaching as I
have been led to explore what it means to become disciples, to become a community
of faith. These are matters that may not put any money into the building fund
but they make a deposit into the minds, the hearts and the spirit of the congregation
in ways that sometimes are imperceptible. In the long run I believe this kind
of teaching and growing has great value.